Grownups and Children First (Toddlers Last)

by Sarah Lane
It is ironic, or perhaps more accurately just plain wrong, that the movements to green up our workplaces and schools are so far ahead of the efforts to make day cares eco-friendly. Not to say that no one is doing anything about it. But the large-scale successful national eco-school programs such as the Green Schools Initiative, the Earth Day Network’s Green Schools Project, and the National Wildlife Federation’s Eco-Schools program and international efforts like Jane Goodall’s Roots and Shoots and the Green Schools Alliance focus on elementary and …

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Living Your Values »

Throwing a Green Birthday Party

By Julie Hall and Sarah Lane
Making your child’s party green is easy on the planet and easy to do. It’s also good modeling for kids and other parents. Here are some Earth-smart ideas to help you get started. Visit our Planet-Friendly Party Activities post for creative party ideas on environmentally friendly themes.
Tableware

Napkins. Use washable colorful fabric scraps from a fabric store to make fun, reusable napkins. Or use recycled paper towels.
Tablecloth. Use an old sheet for a tablecloth that kids can …

EMFs, Health & Safety, Living Your Values, Take Action »

Power to the People

by Sarah Lane
In response to our local power company’s proposed construction of a new electrical substation and installation of high voltage power lines in the downtown core area, I decided to investigate possible health and safety concerns related to electromagnetic fields (EMFs), those electrical and magnetic emissions created by all the electrical devices in our lives, from appliances to giant electric towers. I knew the conventional wisdom that there is no definitive link shown through research between EMFs and cancers, including childhood leukemia. But I’ve also walked underneath high voltage …

Independence/Interdependence, Living Your Values »

When Less Is Less: Universal Exclusion Versus Universal Inclusion

by Sarah Lane
So the City Council of Asheville, North Carolina, wants to keep a man elected to the council, Cecil Bothwell, from being sworn in because he is a nontheist, and the North Carolina Constitution, in direct conflict with the U.S. Constitution, disqualifies for office “First, any person who shall deny the being of Almighty God.” At the same time the Rotary Club of Leesburg, Virginia, has been blocked from doing what it has done for 50 years: set up a Christmas tree on the grounds of the Loudon County …

Books, Caring for the Planet, Healthy Eating, Living Your Values, Recipes »

Calling All Nonbelievers

by Sarah Lane
During these two weeks of the Climate Conference in Copenhagen, I think it is time to reach across the great divide between those who believe in climate change and those who don’t and link arms. So whether or not you think climate change is happening, whether you believe it is human made or caused by an angry God, little elves, or bad luck, whether you work for a coal plant or a bicycle messenger service, shed your need to be right and join in the broad movement to …

Caring for the Planet, Health & Safety, Living Your Values »

The Trouble with Bottled Water

by Sarah Lane
The Natural Defenses Resource Council, in its article “Bottled Water: Pure Drink or Pure Hype,” reports that more than half of all Americans drink bottled water and about one-third of the population drinks it regularly. So Americans are thirsty. Why is this a problem?
1. What’s in the Bottles
One problem has to do with what’s in the bottles themselves. The Earth Policy Institute reports that 1.5 million barrels of oil per year, which is enough to fuel 100,000 cars for that same year, are required to satisfy …

Caring for the Planet, Living Your Values »

Giving Gifts

by Sarah Lane
Giving a seasonal gift, whether for Christmas or Hanukkah or Kwanzaa, might appropriately be intended for various reasons:

to express love,
to spread joy, and
to share abundance with those in need.

It is often, however, done for the following reasons:

to fulfill an obligation,
to meet an expectation, and
to fill a void.

In a world teeming with excess and yet, at the same time, bursting with want and need, in a world choking on plastic and suffocating from carbon emissions, we need to work toward eliminating those last three reasons and grope our way …

Caring for the Planet, Food & Cooking, Good Stuff, Health & Safety, Living Your Values, Products for Kids, Smart Market, Waste-Free Lunch »

Pack a Waste-Free Lunch

What follows are resources to help you provide a healthier (toxin-free), zero-waste lunch for your child. If you’re just beginning this process, don’t get discouraged. Even by changing a few things you do, you are taking worthwhile steps. As Voltaire says, don’t allow the perfect to be the enemy of the good!

Specifically, you want to avoid the following:

1. Toxins
For the health of your family

Lead. Lead affects the brain and behavior and is especially dangerous to young children still in early developmental stages. Read about lead in children’s …

Independence/Interdependence, Themes »

Joy Lives in the Sharing

by Katy Leakey
Color and beauty are the thoughts that strike me when I see a Maasai woman. Each morning, as I walk out to greet the women who work with us, I am impressed by their dramatic allure. With their long slender necks, ear and wrists adorned in layers of beaded jewelry, and fit bodies draped in colorful patterned shukas, they are both stately and voluptuous—a blend few cultures have achieved.
My husband and I live among the Maasai in Kenya and employ the women to handcraft jewelry. The business started …

Independence/Interdependence, Themes »

Interconnections in the Intertidal Zone

by Jennifer Calkins
Sand colored egg cases litter the Puget Sound Beaches dotting the city of Seattle at low tide.  These cases are produced by Lewis’ moon snails (Polinices lewisii). The mucus emitted to form the egg cases is shaped by the snail’s large foot. If you see the egg cases, you will also see empty shells of other animals with neat little holes drilled in them.  A hungry moon snail grabs a clam or mussel or some other shellfish, drills a hole with its radula (a drill-like structure found in …

Health & Safety, Healthy Eating, Independence/Interdependence, Living Your Values, Themes »

Individual Ingredients for a Community-Building Meal

by Sarah Townsend
I’m scheduled to pick grape leaves tomorrow for a meal that will celebrate locally grown wine and produce. I have been instructed to pick the leaves that are both large enough to stuff and not tough. I know to feel the veins and note the curvature of the leaves. I also know not to strip all the leaves from any one branch which may cause it to wither—a reminder that no one individual can carry the weight of community. These leaves will be rolled into dolmas for our …